The evening world. Newspaper, September 28, 1912, Page 4

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ATO FUT, FRED FROM WORKKOUSE HES WEDINER Young Pinkus’s Lawyer Seeks Girl Complainant, Who, He Says, Hasn't Left Town. @reserick Pinkus jr, freed from the je of Jaying coment walls at the Work- hhowse yesterday afternoon by @ writ of appeal trom his sentence by Magistrate ‘Mrotel, celedrated hi ‘With a festive dinner at Louls eetording to patrons of the restauran| ‘The dinner was long and merry, humorous narratives by the host on “The Cateninal Lite As 1 1 Found It.” It Was eaid at the restaurant to-day that young Pinkue may or may not have deen there, but if there had been a breakage HAR It would appear on the books, Inas woh as there war no such item it was Aagumed that if the dinner did ocour it as kept within conservative pounds of Hs jer = H 2 iil ‘The lawyer added that he wae having 1 er innocence hed not been pon, as she had said. \ Mr. Eliperin sald to-day he hadn't the i to lay before the court evidence that imposed iT 3 ry if = i LANDS HIM IN HOSPITAL, Brooklyn Man, Assailed by Taftites, Has Only an Even Chance Were of exultation and The next were of anger, dis- for divers persone had with such effect he ia ai with many cuts and peesible fracture of the phy and Cavanagh of station found Johnson i i iH epee nae id easerting to some that he would win MRS. HANNER ARRESTED IN AUTOMOBILE SHOOTING. Charged With Wounding Husband at Time She Also Was Shot— _ Warrant Served in Hospital. MEAGARA FALLS, N. Y., Sept. 2,— ‘Mrs. George B. Han der arrest in 8t. Detective Callinan noon to-day, 8! Was taken to North Tonawanda trolley, where e#he will be arraigned be- fore Judge Smith charged with having mhot her husban! during an automobile ride, near North Tonawanda, on Sept. 32% The case has been something of a mystery to the police, Hanner was shot tm the back of the head and Mrs. ner in the Knee, Hanner ts still u treatment. The finding of a sealed tetter ad- Greased to a Buffalo mun in th ner home In Buffalo may lead to the sol thom ef the mystery. Thi expressed to-day by 1 Ackerson, who has been opinion was Attorney Ung an tthe Mrs, » In the letter the author ts said investigation into the cause. He re to have exprensed “undying io tor ne the one to whom it was addressed. ; See ieee OIX VETOES PAY TO O’RYAN. to Salary o mesos ALBANY, Sept. 2% —G Dix an: Mounced to-day that the question of compensation for Major - General O'Ryan, commanding the State National Guard, had been se.tled, He said that 4 M Dix was greet eball ‘the military law states that the Major- | General aor ane nee we THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 1912. Building of the Home es Treasurer of the Real Es- tate Exchange of Long Island Says That Build- ers of Small Houses Are Pouring Into Nassau) County as a Result of Highly Favorable New Rapid Transit Develop- ments. BY D, MAUJER M’LAUGHLIN. Eastward preamure te growing more pronounced every week in the metro politan overflow. Home seekern have studied the ait uation very carefully intent gently, apparently, and have die- e that new rapid transit de- volopmenta are opening the outer Long Isard sections as the next logical ter- titory of least restetance for the city masses, Land values ere rising stead- ily in response to the movement, and SS ee the number of dwellings erected o/[J passing the highest totals of preced: Ing vearn. The result te seen ta the| 0) *SAL B RUGHLIN: greatly increasing Importance of Nas- sau County as @ home contre. Fall reports from all quarters Of! 1015 are now the lowest relatively tm Greater New York. ° Nassau show that there has been an immense addition to the all-year popu- lation. Hundreds of families that formerly took summer places there have decided to become permanent reat- dents. Mont of them are from Man- hattan. They find that they can get all city conveniences in the Nassau towns, where eo many city people have fone to live, taking with them their old-time city demands, which the local tradesmen have hastened to meet. NASSAU HOME ICTIONS ARE GREATLY TED. And sit facilities, which have been improving every year, are now so perfect that many of Nassau's pop- ular home sections are practically as ble for Manhattan business men orth Manhattan and Bronx oe David P. Leahy Realty Company at South Ozone Park, L. 1, sok No, 364 avenue, \ house, to Christian Raamussen, $3,850; also two hots on Boss avenue to Rose ‘Thinkham. oe e Associated Midwood Company ald three more new dwellings thin week in the group on East Fourteenth street, near Avenue K, Brooklyn. Thoy have Dullt over two hundred houses there, eee W. C. Williams and A. F. Cloee fought new houses at HH Court, L. 1, this week from standard Home Conatruction Csaatanyld Contly dwellings have been planned at L. i, for R. A. Coe, Hons F. Tucker, Mins A. Grueting, 'W. MoRae, Wilson Dayton, A. G. Daia-| t Mountain Lakes, N. luded Harold E, Bron- alter IL Bartholomew, L. Up- Francis B, Loomis, Herman Bum- Jecting &@ home in such @ fast develop- ing territory. It is Ike getting Im on the ground floor, financially, and home- who have realized thie aspect of watisfied with buy the situation are well thelr positipn. Nassau ie partaking liberally of the big home development in Queens. The new dual subways, with the Queens section to be by practically three syateme—the Interborough, B. R. T. and Manhatten Elevated Rallroad extensions—will carry the overflow population squarely up to the Nassau bounds rtes. Within a few years, almost before the new transit system can be com- pleted, the Greater City will have in- creased #0 enormously in population that practically all of the territory opened by rapid transit lines will be needed for fiat houses. That will drive the builders of private ngs inte | Nassau as the most available place for thelr operations. SOME OF THE BEAUTIES OF NABBAU COUNTY. ‘Transit evolution is favoring such a Movement in a most ideal manner. Nassau spreads across the island from the Bound to the Atlantic Ocean from the Queens boundary to Oyster Bay un the north and Massapeque on the south, ite Bound hilla, the ocean side is an level stretch. Its largest settlements and most rapid population growth are in Its central and southern parts, whore climate and outdoor attractions are the | main inducements for residents and Visitors, particulany the wide beys and splendid beaches Nageau ie served with the beat kind of rapid transit by 1! visions of the Long Is! the North Shore line, central par: and Montauk division for the southern section. The ratiroad has double-tracked and electrified « large part of ite system in Naseau and built connecting lines, * such as the Leng Beach and Far Rockaway divisions, oe e A. W. Winkie & Co, sold a new house on St. Clair avenue, Rutherford, N. J., to-day to Sterling Miller, oe e Plot buyers at Leonia, N. J., thie week were W. J. & A. Koenig, J. F, Bickle, L, Erkau, Charles Heins, Lackawanna Realty Company bought twenty lote for {mprovement at once with dwellings, WALL STREET ‘The stock market again mounted up- want at the outset of trading to-day. The eame heavy buying demand for stocks that has been in progress the at the opening to-<lay, and the entire Met lost Uttle time in creating higher ranges, The oulk of whe buying orders was placed in Steel, Union Pacific, Reading and Copper, All (hese issues displayed large alzed advatices The upward trend continued in the which were active, Net Last, Ch'gee a " » a Work on the new terminal and union 8 goin; ett ia 1h) 1 progress of : Bh Long Island east of the city limite and thy fore the east of to the ex- ce. Another Be: Hs completion ts imperativ to rr operated by | FAdvance. | —De ae Saenger REUNITED ON TROLLEY CaR. MANY HOME BUYERS Billy Lakeland Patches Up Difter- IN THE SUBURBS MAKE LIVELY MARKET, ences with Wife. All fe serene again in the home of Billy Lakeland, veteran horseman, at Neptune avenue and the Ocean Park- way, Coney Island, Mra, Lakeland, who “\iamt Tuesday left her husband of thirty years after a alight quarrel over the servants’ wages, has returned, and + loverything has been forgiven, After fnserting an advertinement tn the dally papers aud expressing regret over his part in the quarrel, Lakeland Extensive country estates and large | tracts for small home development ha been prominent in the week tons, Properties sold Harrison-Kye section © Gibbons Shoreacre | bury rin New Jersey nardsvilie place t |srat ¢ oney, set out on @ personal search. He failed the olf Sheepshead 1 Bovine | os te white tees Hae tee ne pape ves Sta gi bean See in which he was riding home Thurs- fee aee jevlons) gay. Lakeland sat down beside her and | extended the five branch, Now they Bryan Ts Kennelly, a@ auctioneer, in| 8re positive they will never aawin let] | selling % Bronx lots on the premines to-day along Broadway around ‘Two : “| i undred Fifty-sixth y Hundred and Fifteaisth street opposite PRINCESS PAT IN DANGER. | lots at Jamal -Hillerest on Oct, 12, NANAIMO, B. C,, Bept, 28.—During Joseph P. Day will & reception to the Governor General, the gohn i 1 the Duke of Connaught here yeater- day, an evergreen tree, which formed [part of the decorations in front of | Halesroo:ns, the court house, toppled over Wovdmere, Le I, on Oot, 19, It would have fallen on Princess Sire Patricia tind not W. Ro Baker, Sec: Wiltam &. Harmon sald to-day that, | etary of the Canadian Pacific Rail with a city subway assured for Staten| ay: Who f# @ member of the Royal Iuland, there ts no other -section: where |Party, happened to atep back just at land Values ought to show euch @ great) that Moment, with the result that the Percentage of increase Lecausp pricus ine fell on him. He was got seriously jared, oo te cent me as a Matter of Economy ;|to him on the wonders of New Ro- leat two weeks was again in evidence | | tra | forced to y | makes Pape's Diapepsin the largest sell- ‘FORTY-FIVE MINUTES | FROM BROADWAY, IT'S _ONEGALA DAY TODAY | Town George Cohan Put on} | the Map Tries to Prove | that It Is No Jay. | | | i} | i} | | j ‘This is the day in New Rochelle when New Rochelle extends the glad hand to all atrangers who with to look New Ro- chelie over, t his or her eyes on New Rochelle’s beauty, listen to New Rochelle barkers bark anent the de-| sirability of New Rochelle as a home, the heaithfuiness of New Rochelle air, the greeness of New Rochelle grass, the blueness of New Rochelle sky, the wet- ness of New Rochelle water, the cleanli- [Tess of Now Rochelle dust, the ferttitty | of New Rochelle #ol, the splendid reptd | tranait facilities of New Rochelle, the proximity of New Rochelle to Long Island Sound, tho excellence of New Ro- chello's golf links, Ite tennis courts, tte croquet lawns, ite #oda fountains, tts butter and exg emporiums, its home datrien, its henneries and catteries and | doggeries, Ite stables and garages, ite dry groceries and green groceries, et cetera, et cetera. ‘They call it New Rochelle Day and there are signs on every corner an- nouneing the fact that this is the day to pilot the visitor around and expatiate ehelle, And the visitors have deon pouring in by the trainioad, aboard #oores of automoblies and on streams of trolley cars, Aas fast as they dis-/ embark, they get the glad hand and are Tushed to the sight-seeing buses, The | buses take them round and round and | round New Rochelle and out to the bay, where there are boats to take them round and round the bay. There are big cats and big musics and bie talkings and the real estate fraternity are up to their ears in clover. x iauifineeteen GETS A PURSE IN SUBWAY, THEN DETECTIVE GETS HIM. | Little Hertvert Faunce got to the Hip- podrome after all. But it was after euch an experience that he was sae upon the thrilling battle sceno without @ tremor. Tt looked very much as if mother and Herbert would have to go back to Brooklyn to-day when, at the Grand Central subway station, Mrs, Faunce @iscovered that her rurse, containing not oaly all her money but the prectous tickets, too, had been stolen But the real excitement did not come until Inter for Glerbert, He was just about to follow Mra, Faunce on to @ train headed back whence they came, when ® heavy set, square jawed gen- tleman approached. In his right hand he carried his hat politely and in his left, by the seruff of the neck and roughly, he carried a struggling, equirming, under-sized youth of elght- wen, Madam,” sald this odd ents of his te : 4 unttl the purse fell from some pi onceaiment on hia victim's person. ‘Then he told another and Hoe: t they were facing a youth who had seen the Insic prise ons—a youth he him: had seen ex- ploring the inside of Mra, Faunce's handbag. “Shifty Ja Weingarten was the desperad said the de- tectwe, who ann in intention of taking him down qmuarters, where they have pletures of him, siete Chinese Loan List Closed, | LONDON, Sept. %.—The subseription | let of the “Independent Chinese loan” cloned to-day at the advertised time, 1 oclock, Whether the loan was fully ; subscribed by the public is a mattor | of conjecture, as the Iasuing ka de- e quo~ to-day the Stock Exchange was 1-16 premium. Inve $40,000 U MEXICO CITY, Sept. 28. th Threat. nder threat William Orr, south of Pen: an Amertean hae been rrender to th els $14,000 cash and a $28,000 equipment, it was re- ported here to-lay, Kmbassador Bry: TOKIO, Sept. Page Bryan, United States Ambassador, loft for America to-day on three months’ leave of absence, A large und rep- resentative crowd gathered to bid him farewell. He will travel via Corea, Peking and Siberia. SURELY SETTLES. UPSET STOMACHS “Pape’s Diapepsin” Ends Indigestion, Gas, Sour- ness and Heartburn in Five Minutes Hea omachs in order jade tion artburn and sour- nen hat—just that— | ing stomach regulator in the ‘ou eat ferments ructate i head in dias: s tongue coated; dile and indiges- It's truly hishing+almost marvelous, and the joy is its harmlessness. A large fifty-cent case of P H pepsin will give you # hundred dolla: worth of satisfaction or your dru, | hands you your money back, | It's worth its weight in gold to men | and women who can't get their stomachs | regulated. It belongs in your ae | should always be kept handy in cuse of sick, sour, upsed stomach during the day orat night. It's the quickest, surest and | most harmless stomach doctor in Na A Great Play, and Its Application to Music 'T is a great thing, in a certain sort of merchandising and advertising, to know how TO KEEP WITHIN THE LAW—to wheedle the public into a false belief, and to get a BIG price for the article advertised, while making a buyer think that he is getting a bargain. Take an article about which few people can have direct technical knowledge (SUCH AS A. PIANO) and an advertiser can say almost anything, and have it believed. So all he has to do is to KEEP WITHIN THE LAW. And the Law, co far, has taken no notice of the advertiser who claimed his goods were “WORTH” a far greater price than their real value. Let us illustrate the point: Here Is the Beautiful CONREID Piano (Smaller Size, $190) This same piano, under another name, is sold by other good stores in large cities, at $250, $275 and $800. In some small towns dealers are known to sell the same piano for $350. But, WOULD THAT JUSTIFY US IN CLAIMING THAT IT WAS A $350 PIANO? Yet exactly that thing has been done, by various stores, during the past year; and we have been informed that hundreds of pianos have been sold by this sort of statement—TO PEOPLE At $210. «Within the Law” WHO DID NOT KNOW THE FACTS. And these Piano—WHICH WE GUARANTEE TO BE NO BETTER THAN THE ‘‘CONREID”’ (if as good)—have been sold as a big bargain to © people who paid FORTY to FIFTY DOLLARS more than they would need to pay for the CONREID. And what is more the pity—they have often been sold to people who could not spare the money —people who have stinted and saved to give the girl or boy a chance to get a musical education. When our experts were studying the question of what piano we would sell for about two hun- dred dollars we canvassed the whole piano-making industry for a whole year. We finally selected a manufacturer whose pianos could not be sold, under his name, by any dealer for less than $225, in the small size, and $250, in the large size. But most all dealers in the inland and western cities get fifty to a hundred dollars more for them. Bearing the distinguished name “CONREID,” with the makers’ name on the frame of the piano, these pianos are sold ALL YEAR ROUND for $190 and $210, at GIMBELS ONLY. Wouldn’t it be cause for resentment if some dealer should advertise these ‘same Pianos as a great bargain at $250, and say they were worth $350? Wouldn’t it be cause for careful inspection and comparison ON YOUR PART, if you thought of buying a Piano? Whenever a dealer tells you that a heard before, is ‘‘worth $350”’ you will ment is by remembering that the beautiful SHONINGER, famous all over the world, is only $325, and the aristocratic VOSE, loved by true musicians iano, whose name for two generations, is sold for $360 and upwards. If you wish to make a happy and SAFE investment DON’T BUY ANY OTHER PIANO Until You Have Examined the CONREID At $190 Small Large Upright and $210 Upright Terms—$10 Cash and $6 a Month With the GIMBEL GUARANTEE of absolute satisfaction. We will be pleased to demonst our convenience. day that suits that ANYBOD Broadway now how ridiculous such a state- rate the CONREID PIANO for you on Monday, or any other The CONREID PLAYER-PIANO—a magnificent instrument CAN PLAY—$450—also on EASY TERMS. GIMBEL BROTHERS Piano Store, Eighth Floor you have never Thirty-third ’ a ~ —") See) Streat | ' (

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